Last month the information commissioner ruled the full details of the contract between the LLDC and West Ham should be made public, but the LLDC has appealed the ruling, arguing it would reveal commercially sensitive information.

The Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park planning authority has released a copy of the contract with less redacted information, revealing that the LLDC will pay for a number of services including some catering staff, undersoil heating and floodlighting, the stadium tannoy and drug testing facilities.

However, the LLDC deny that the deal will come at a cost to the taxpayer as it will contribute to increased revenue and regeneration in the wider area in the long term.

A spokesperson said:

Once the transformation of the stadium is complete it will not require continuous subsidy from the taxpayer and will see a return to the taxpayer through future profits due to the agreements in place with the operator Vinci and concessionaires West Ham United and UK Athletics.

The stadium will contribute to the ongoing and hugely successful regeneration programme already being delivered at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park

West Ham, who insist they negotiated the best deal for the taxpayer, are paying just £15m of the £272m transformation costs to ready the stadium for football, with £25m coming from national government and £40m from the local borough of Newham.

Although exact figures have not been disclosed, it is also known that West Ham will pay a different amount based on where they finish in the league and how they perform in cup or European competition.